Click to return to BOL home page
 


MAIN CONTENT 
Compliance

    Agency Road Maps

    Alphabet Soup

    Compliance Tools

    FACTA/FCRA

    OFAC

Lending

    Article 9

    FACTA/FCRA

    HMDA Heaven

    Lending Tools

    SCRA

Marketing

Operations

    Check 21

    Disaster Updates

    Disaster Recovery

    HR Corner

    IRA Season

    Money Matters

    Operations Tools

    SARResearchGuide

Security

    AML/BSA

    Bank Robbery

    Counterfeits

    ID Fraud/Phishing

    Security Tools

Technology/eBanking

    Disaster Updates

    Disaster Recovery

    Info Security


SPECIAL AREAS 
BOL Archives

BOL Blogs

Briefing Archive

Calendar

Court Watch

Disaster Issuances

Em@il Education

Examiner's Corner

Executive Briefing

Infovault

Launch Pad

Lessons Learned

Monthly Roundup

Risk Management

Site Map

Site Orientation

Top Stories


~ ~ ~
SERVICES 
Background Check
BOL Conferencing

CrimeDex

Em@il Education

ID Verification

Record Retention


~ ~ ~
SHOP 

Banker Store

Bankers Info Ntwk
Books
Vendor Connect

CONNECT 

Career Connect

Learning Connect

Vendor Connect

Guru Central

INTERACT 

Ask a Guru
Bankers Threads

Contact Us

Give Us Feedback


TOOLS 

60 Second Solutions

Alphabet Soup

Banker Tools

BOL Forms

FUN 

Banker Humor

Banker Memories

BOL Recipes

eCard Exchange

LEARN MORE 

About Advertising
About Our Sponsors
About Us

Print Friendly! Email This Article! Discuss NOW!

Secure Transactions from Home

Technology companies are introducing new ways to secure payments made electronically, both to confirm that the individual is the legitimate cardholder and to securely transmit payment data when a person is not physically present at the payment site.

Citadel Commerce Corp. recently announced it has launched a new device that allows debit card transactions and credit card swiping to be conducted from home. The hand-held device is a keypad and LCD display that interfaces with a consumer's PC via the standard USB port. It allows a consumer to transmit fully encrypted personal identification number blocks to Citadel's data center for purchases using the company's electronic wallet and a standard bank-issued debit card. It also allows a consumer to swipe a standard credit card when making a purchase from home.

Meanwhile, MagTrek is touting its MagnePrint technology as a way that consumers can use the swipe stripes of their own cards as security tokens to authenticate that the person making a transaction is the legitimate holder of the card.

The MagnePrint is a system that uses the "noise" prints of the stripe (the unique characteristics created by the way that the billions of magnetic particles on a card are put together) to authenticate the card almost in the same way that a person's fingerprint might be used. The system requires a reader that can compare this magnetic "fingerprint" with a pre-recorded print, and the company has marketed it as a low-cost way that consumers could validate their identities at home for accessing a bank's web site or other web-based transactions. If the reader compares the prints and scores the card as valid, the user then enters his or her user ID and password; therefore, the transaction is protected by two tiers of authentication. MagTek has also marketed the product as a tool that can cut down on skimming at automated teller machines by matching prints to card users.

Copyright © 2005 Bankers' Hotline. Originally appeared in Bankers' Hotline, Vol. 15, No. 12, 12/05




Print Friendly! Email This Article! Discuss NOW!



Privacy Policy    Disclaimer   Recommend This Site !   Contact Us


BankersOnline is a free service made possible by the generous support of our advertisers and sponsors. Advertisers and sponsors are not responsible for site content. Please help us keep BankersOnline FREE to all banking professionals. Support our advertisers and sponsors by clicking through to learn more about their products and services.